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rogue, (rôg), n. [<16th-c. thieves' slang <L.rogare, to ask]


Recipient of the
2012 American Theatre Wing
National Theatre Company Award

 

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I loved every minute of Beauty Queen!
—Roger Owen

Drop whatever you're doing and get tickets because this production is an absolutely brilliant portrayal of raw humanity. Do not, do NOT miss this play!!!
—Jay Hornbacher

No one does drama like The Rogue.
—Laura Kosakowsky

Everyone in the cast was just amazing. The play unfolds in such a taut and unexpected way,
it really had the whole audience on the edge of their seat.

—Ellen Campbell

I am so glad we were able to see one of the final performances of The Beauty Queen of Leenane.
It was a remarkable production, and perhaps the best performances of all they plays we have seen at the Rogue.
And the other performances have been spectacular!

—Marjorie Hochberg

 

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Holly Griffith as Maureen

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Holly Griffith as Maureen

'The Beauty Queen of Leenane' by Martin McDonagh

The Beauty Queen of Leenane

by Martin McDonagh

PRODUCTION SPONSORS:
RONDA LUSTMAN AND PAUL WINICK

Directed by Chirstopher Johnson
Music Direction by Russell Ronnebaum

February 27–March 15, 2020

Thursday–Saturday 7:30 P.M., Saturday & Sunday 2:00 P.M.
Discussion with the cast and director follows all performances

Performance Schedule

The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y
300 East University Boulevard

Free Off-Street Parking
See Map and Parking Information

In a rural Irish cottage of the aging Mag and her spinster daughter Maureen,
their comic and appalling lives are brought to a head as a romance develops for Maureen that Mag resents.

 

 

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley

 

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Photos by Tim Fuller

 

Supporting Materials

Free Open Talk:
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead

Christopher Johnson

On Saturday, February 22, Director Christopher Johnson presented a free open talk on Irish playwright Martin McDonagh and his 1996 play, The Beauty Queen of Leenane.
We also shared some sneak previews of Beauty Queen.

Listen to a podcast of the open talk.

For more background on the play, check out Jerry James’ essay
Monstrous Children:
The Plays and Films of Martin McDonagh

This open talk is supported in part by a generous gift from
Paul Winick & Ronda Lustman and Pat & John Danloe.

Note that all our upcoming season’s plays will be preceded by
a free open talk at 2:00 P.M. on the Saturday before the run begins,
and you are invited! Talks can fill up, so plan to arrive early.

View the full-sized poster for the play

 

 

 


 

Press

Beauty Queen of Leenane will shake your foundations

Review of The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Chuck Graham on March 3 in Let The Show Begin! at TucsonStage.com

Rogue stages a vivid, dark Beauty Queen of Leenane

Review of The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Kathleen Allen to appear in the March 9th Arizona Daily Star

A Very Irish Play

Review of The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Cliff Cunningham on February 29 in SunNewsTucson.com

Rogue Theatre production takes on the impact of scarcity on the human condition

Preview of The Beauty Queen of Leenane in the February 27th Arizona Daily Star

Read others’ reviews of The Rogue Theatre, or write your own review on TripAdvisor!

Direction

Christopher Johnson, Director

Christopher Johnson (Director) first came to The Rogue in 2011 to play Jewel in As I Lay Dying, and now serves as an Artistic Associate and General Manager. The recipient of eight Arizona Daily Star Mac Award nominations for Best Director, his directing credits include The Rogue’s productions of Middletown, The Crucible, Three Tall Women, Penelope, and his adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray, as well as The Rogue’s staged readings of The Illusion, No Exit, Don Juan in Hell, A House of Pomegranates, The River, and Elizabeth Rex. Elsewhere in Tucson, Christopher has directed boom, Cabaret, The Year Of Magical Thinking, The Altruists, and Speech & Debate for Winding Road Theater Ensemble; Psycho Sarah for Middlesex Repertory; Hedwig and The Angry Inch for The Bastard Theatre; as well as Wit, Persephone Or Slow Time, The Book Of Liz, My Name Is Rachel Corrie, Say You Love Satan, Killer Joe, The Rocky Horror Show, Danny And The Deep Blue Sea, The Importance Of Being Earnest, Savage In Limbo, Bug, Titus Andronicus, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream for Etcetera at Live Theatre Workshop where he served as Artistic Director from 2007–12. Before turning his attentions entirely to directing he acted in just over a hundred plays on Tucson stages.
Christopher Johnson’s direction of The Beauty Queen of Leenane is supported in part by a generous gift from Paul Winick & Ronda Lustman.

Notes from the Director

Tautly written, wickedly funny, and as entertaining as it is heartbreaking in its climactic revelations, Martin McDonagh’s The Beauty Queen of Leenane is a folk tale about the impact of scarcity on the human condition. Like most folk tales it is very dark, just as mysterious, and carries with it an ever-present threat of blood. Also like most folk tales, the monsters under the bed are really us—lost souls fighting for survival in a world of plenty with seemingly none to go around.

The small details of producing the play have been a unique challenge. Late in the rehearsal process I asked Holly Griffith when the last time was that she played a character at the Rogue who had to keep track of where her car keys were on stage. Joking aside, the realism with which The Beauty Queen of Leenane unfolds has been a delightful nuisance to our usual creative process.

We typically deal in much more imaginative storytelling techniques. Our method of theatricality often comes in the form of presenting you with a deconstructed reality. Think of the whale boats in Moby Dick—four or five groups ofactors merely sitting on the floor and rowing in unison. This worked in Moby Dick thanks to the two most important tools in our arsenal as theatre artists: the great literature it supported, and the intelligence and imagination of the Rogue audience.

But the few places I attempted to employ more poetic storytelling devices in Beauty Queen fell flat in rehearsal. Slowly pouring grains of rice into a metal bucket to indicate the sound of rain, oddly enough, proved too literal. This, I believe, is because the fragile realism of McDonagh’s play is crucial to what he’s really after—deconstructing reality in the lives of the characters on stage in real time.

Before the lights come up on the first scene you’ll likely notice the placement on stage of a crucifix, a rocking chair, a wood-burning stove—the type of things we might consider quaint and lovely and Irish—a tea towel embroidered with the blessing, “May you be half an hour in heaven afore the devil knows you’re dead.” For most of the rehearsal process I assumed this expression meant, “May you live a good enough life not to attract the Devil’s attention,” but Joseph McGrath told me one night that what it really means is, “May you get away with it.”

Either way, McDonagh is baiting our expectations and prejudices with these nostalgic set dressings—a quaint tour of Irish piety is not what he has in store for us. The photograph of John and Robert Kennedy over the kitchen cabinets reminds us of the hope for successful emigration and the looming threat of tragedy.

London-born to Irish immigrants, McDonagh often writes what and who he grew up with as an examination of the coalescing factors the Irish have endured that would provoke desperate acts of violence in any country, community, family, or sane human being. This complicated relationship to where and who we come from, and how to liberate ourselves from those bonds without losing too much in the process, is the question at the forefront of the story.

Whether or not Maureen, the eponymous Beauty Queen of Leenane, will make it longer than half an hour in heaven before the Devil knows she’s dead, seems to be left for us to decide.

—Christopher Johnson, Director
director@theroguetheatre.org

Playwright

Martin McDonagh, Playwright

Martin McDonagh (Playwright) was born in London in 1970, the son of Irish parents. He is considered among the most acclaimed Irish playwrights living today. He is the author of several plays including The Cripple of Inishmaan. His play, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, is the first of three plays in The Leenane Trilogy. In 2017, McDonagh wrote and directed the film Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, for which he won Golden Globe Awards for Best Screenplay and Best Picture.

 

Cynthia Meier as Mag

Cynthia Meier as Mag

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Cast

Maureen Holly Griffith+
Ray Dooley Hunter Hnat+
         Pato Dooley Ryan Parker Knox*+
Mag Cynthia Meier+

*Member of Actors’ Equity Association,
the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
+ Member of The Rogue Resident Acting Ensemble

 

Holly Griffith (Maureen)

Holly Griffith (Maureen) is a 6th year member of the Resident Acting Ensemble at The Rogue. Favorite productions include Moby Dick, Blithe Spirit, Middletown, Much Ado About Nothing, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Three Tall Women, Celia A Slave, A House of Pomegranates, The White Snake, Uncle Vanya, Angels in America, By the Bog of Cats and Hamlet. She also serves as a Box Officer and Co-Producer of the John & Joyce Ambruster Play-Reading Series at The Rogue. Holly holds an MA in English Literature from the University of Arizona where she now teaches in the department of Theatre, Film, & Television. She also serves as Artistic Associate and Director at the Scoundrel and Scamp Theatre, and maintains a fierce interest in the culture and literary tradition of Ireland.
Holly Griffith’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Sally Krusing and Els Duvigneau & Stu Salasche.

Hunter Hnat (Ray Dooley) is grateful to be in his second season as a member of The Rogue Resident Acting Ensemble. You may have seen him in previous Rogue productions as Flask in Moby Dick, Edmund Tyrone in Long Day’s Journey Into Night, the Mechanic in Middletown, Ezekiel Cheever in The Crucible, Son of Three Blind Queens (and others) in The Secret in the Wings, Claudio in Much Ado About Nothing, Christopher in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Andrea in Galileo, Oswald in King Lear, Steindorff in Bach at Leipzig, and Ensemble for A House of Pomegranates. He has also been a part of The Rogue’s staged readings of The Illusion, No Exit, and Cloud 9. Other credits include Jokanaan in Salomé (The Scoundrel & Scamp), Ensemble and Romeo U/S in Romeo and Juliet (Arizona Theatre Company), Boyfriend in How the House Burned Down (Live Theatre Workshop) as well as several other workshops and readings. He is a U of A alumnus with his BFA in Musical Theatre, class of 2015. Enjoy the show!
Hunter Hnat’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Bill & Barb Dantzler and Jack & Kathy Mattox.

 

Hunter Hnat (Ray Dooley)
Ryan Parker Knox (Pato Dooley)

Ryan Parker Knox (Pato Dooley)  The Beauty Queen of Leenane marks Ryan’s 40th production in his 8th season as a member of The Rogue Acting Ensemble. Originally from the Midwest, he has his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of South Dakota and spent nearly 11 years in Minnesota’s Twin Cities working for various local and regional theaters. Gratitude to Ryan’s family, his friends, his fellow ensemblers, and especially his cats who have always stuck by him through everything.
Ryan Parker Knox’s performance is supported in part by generous gifts from Shawn Burke and Clay Shirk.

Cynthia Meier (Mag) is Co-Founder and Managing and Associate Artistic Director for The Rogue, and has appeared in Blithe Spirit, The Crucible, Three Tall Women, The Grapes of Wrath, A House of Pomegranates, Macbeth, Uncle Vanya, Angels in America Part One, The Bridge of San Luis Rey, By the Bog of Cats, The Lady in the Looking Glass, Awake and Sing, Purgatorio, Measure for Measure, Mistake of the Goddess, Mother Courage and Her Children, The Night Heron, The New Electric Ballroom, As I Lay Dying, Major Barbara, The Real Inspector Hound, The Decameron, Ghosts, Not I, Our Town, A Delicate Balance, Immortal Longings, Six Characters in Search of an Author, Red Noses, The Goat (2008 Mac Award for Best Actress), The Maids, Endymion, and The Balcony. Cynthia has been nominated for nine Mac Awards for Best Actress from the Arizona Daily Star. She has also performed in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Arizona Repertory Theatre), A Streetcar Named Desire (Arizona Theatre Company), Blithe Spirit and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Michigan Repertory Theatre), Romeo & Juliet and Chicago Milagro (Borderlands Theatre) and A Namib Spring (1999 National Play Award winner). Cynthia co-founded Bloodhut Productions, which toured throughout the western United States. Cynthia holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from the University of Arizona.
Cynthia Meier’s performance is supported in part by generous gifts from Andy & Cammie Watson and John Blackwell & Denice Blake.

Cynthia Meier (Mag)

 

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Music

Music Direction and Composing/Arranging by Russell Ronnebaum

Janine Piek: Violin
Ms. Piek will be performing on February 27–29 and March 6, 7, 13 & 14

Aidan Kram: Violin
Mr. Kram will be performing on March 1, 5, 8, 12 & 15

Robert Marshall: Cello

Preshow Music

Da Slockit Light
Tune by Tom Anderson
Arranged by Alasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas

Christina
Tune by Alasdair Fraser
Arranged by Fraser & Haas

Body of an American
Tune by The Pogues
Arranged by Russell Ronnebaum

Josefin's Waltz
Tune by Roger Tallroth
Arranged by Fraser & Haas

Production Music

Josefin’s Waltz

Christina

The Letter (Part 1)
Russell Ronnebaum

Body of an American

The Spinning Wheel
Tune by Delia Murphy, arr. Ronnebaum

The Beauty Queen of Leenane
Ronnebaum

Opening of Act 2
Ronnebaum

Da Slockit Light

The Letter (Part 2)
Ronnebaum

The Beauty Queen of Leenane (Reprise)
Ronnebaum

Irish Blessing
Tune by Millie Rieth

Maids of Mitchelstown
Traditional Irish tune


 

Russell Ronnebaum (Music Director, Pianist, Composer)

Russell Ronnebaum (Music Director, Composer/Arranger) is most excited to be serving as The Rogue Theatre’s newly appointed Director of Music and Resident Composer. Russell holds a Master of Music degree in collaborative piano from the University of Arizona where he studied under Dr. Paula Fan. He currently serves as the assistant director of music at St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church in Oro Valley, as well as the staff accompanist for the Tucson Masterworks Chorale. As a classically trained pianist, Russell has performed with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra, the American Wind Symphony Orchestra, Artifact Dance Company, Arizona Repertory Theatre, and as a concerto soloist with the Tucson Masterworks Chorale. Russell made his Carnegie Hall debut in 2016 performing the music of composer Dan Forrest. Past credits include The Rogue’s 2019 and 2020 productions of Much Ado About Nothing, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, Blithe Spirit, and Moby Dick (Music Director, Pianist, and Composer) and The Secret in the Wings (Vocal Director). Recent composition commissions and premieres include music for bassoon quartet, live theatre, strings, brass, voice, choir, and piano. Recordings, videos, sheet music, and upcoming concert dates can be found at www.RRonnebaum.com.
Russell Ronnebaum’s music direction is supported in part by a generous gift from Ward & Judy Wallingford.

Aidan Kram (Violin) began playing the violin in 2013 at the age of ten. He has participated for multiple years in ASTACAP (American String Teachers Association Certificate Advancement Program), and is a winner of the 2019 Tucson Music and Dance Academy Honors Competition. Formerly a principal violinist for the Tucson Junior Strings, he currently performs with the Tucson Philharmonia Youth Orchestra. Aidan’s other interests include tennis, bluegrass fiddle, and music composition. He is a member of the Boy Scouts of America and is completing his pursuit of the prestigious Eagle Scout Rank.

 

Aidan Kram (Violin)
Robert Marshall (Cello)

Robert Marshall (Cello) earned his M.M. of Cello Performance in 2016 from the University of Arizona, where he served as a founding member of the Graduate String Quartet. He has attended the Talis Festival & Academy in Switzerland, the St. Lawrence String Quartet Summer Seminar, and the University of Nebraska Lincoln Chamber Music Institute with the Escher and Chiara String Quartets. Past teachers include Dr. Theodore Buchholz, Charae Krueger, and Dr. Robert Jesselson. Orchestrally, he serves as principal in the Civic Orchestra of Tucson, assistant principal in the Sierra Vista Symphony Orchestra, and is frequently asked to perform with the Tucson Symphony and Tucson Pops Orchestras. In 2019, he performed the Schumann Cello Concerto with the Tucson Repertory Orchestra in preparation for the orchestra’s Japanese tour. During this year he also gave the Southwest premiere of Sarah Hennies’ Contralto, a multimedia piece exploring the relationship between transgender women and their literal and figurative voices scored for strings, percussion, and video. Mr. Marshall also enjoys collaborating on staged productions in dance and theatre. He has worked with the Arizona Theatre Company, Arts Express, the University of Arizona Repertory Theater, and Artifact Dance Project. He looks forward to joining The Rogue Theatre’s production of The Beauty Queen of Leenane in March of 2020.

Janine Piek (Violin) began playing the violin at the age of nine and received a violin scholarship through the Nevada School of the Arts at age seventeen. She is a graduate of the Las Vegas Academy of Performing Arts and holds degrees in Music Education (BM) and Violin Performance (MM) from the University of Arizona. She has performed and recorded with artists such as the Moody Blues, Louis Bellson, Skip Martin, Katherine Byrnes, and Rick Braun. Janine performs with the Southern Arizona Symphony, Tucson Repertory Orchestra, Arizona Theater Company, and the Sierra Vista Symphony, and teaches at the Tucson Academy of Music & Dance.

Janine Piek (Violin)

 

Holly Griffith as Maureen, Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley, Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Holly Griffith as Maureen, Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley,
Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Designers

Costume Design Cynthia Meier

Costume design is supported in part by a generous gift from Bev Bechtel

Scenic Design Joseph McGrath

Scenic design is supported in part by a generous gift from Andy & Cammie Watson

Lighting Design Deanna Fitzgerald

Lighting design is supported in part by a generous gift from Anne & Ed Griffith

 

Production Staff

Stage Manager Megan Coy
Scenic Artist Amy Novelli
Sound Design Chris Babbie
Set Construction Joseph McGrath &
Christopher Johnson
Master Electrician Peter Bleasby
Associate Lighting Designer Megan Coy
Lighting Crew Alex Alegria, Bree Dassinger,
Don Fox, Megan Mahoney,
Lawrence Ware & Mack Woods
Property Master Christopher Pankratz
Special Wig Effect Christopher Pankratz
Dialect Coach Joseph McGrath
Intimacy Coordinator Claire Hancock
House Manager Susan Collinet
Assistant House Managers Paul Winick & Susan Tiss
Box Office Manager Thomas Wentzel
Box Office Assistants Kara Clauser, Shannon Elias,
Holly Griffith & Leigh Moyer
Program Advertising Paul Winick
Program & Website Thomas Wentzel

 

Deanna Fitzgerald (Lighting Design)

Deanna Fitzgerald (Lighting Designer) is a professional Lighting Designer and member of United Scenic Artists, as well as a Professor and head of lighting design and technology at the University of Arizona, where she also serves as the Associate Director for theatre programs and the Director of Graduate Studies. Her lighting design credits include a range of theatre, dance, opera, circus-themed entertainment, puppets, architectural lighting and more. She is a registered yoga and meditation teacher and conducts classes and workshops focused on using these and other “quietive” practices to enrich creative processes. Some of Deanna’s career highlights include the lighting designs for STOMP OUT LOUD, the Las Vegas version of the internationally acclaimed STOMP, for whom she also toured for six years as lighting director; Cirque Mechanics: Boom Town, which toured for two years with an off-Broadway appearance at The New Victory Theatre; and Erth’s Dinosaur Zoo US Tour. Deanna has been smitten with her Rogue family since 2014 when she designed their extraordinary creation Jerusalem, and has since designed Waiting for Godot, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Miss Julie, Bridge of San Luis Rey, Tales from the Jazz Age, Uncle Vanya, Penelope, Macbeth, Celia A Slave, Bach at Leipzig, Three Tall Women, King Lear, Galileo, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, The Secret in the Wings, The Crucible, Long Day’s Journey Into Night and Blithe Spirit. She is grateful for every moment she gets to spend making things with them and for ME Peter Bleasby and the returning Associate LD Megan Coy whose collaborations make that possible.

Megan Coy (Resident Stage Manager, Associate Lighting Designer) is thrilled to return to her hometown to stage manage for The Rogue Theatre! Her first Rogue production was this summer’s Middletown. She spent the last five years working in marketing, stage management, and lighting design at The Magik Theatre in San Antonio, TX. Prior to settling in San Antonio, Megan was the stage manager and lighting director on the first North American tour of Erth’s Dinosaur Zoo Live! She graduated from the University of Arizona with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, training in stage management, lighting design, and dramaturgy. She has worked with Williamstown Theatre Festival, Alpine Theatre Project, and local theater and dance companies in Tucson and San Antonio. Megan is a proud mom to Eleanor and wants to thank Casey for his constant love and support.
Megan Coy’s stage management is supported in part by a generous gift from Andy & Cammie Watson.

Megan Coy (Stage Manager)
Amy Novelli, Scenic Artist

Amy Novelli (Scenic Artist) is originally from Ohio and Pennsylvania She received her Cum Laude BFA from the Columbus (Ohio) College of Art & Design in 1987 and her MFA from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh in 1994. Novelli’s scenic art career began in New York City where she worked as a sculptor for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade Studio.  She was Scenic Charge Artist for the Arizona Theatre Company 2010–2014, painted several sets for Arizona Opera and UA Opera, and presently paints for The Rogue Theatre and Arizona Broadway Theatre in Peoria (Phoenix).  Amy created monstrous Halloween decor for Hotel Congress for 20 years, and was lead painter for Marshal-Fields 1998 award winning Easter Window display “Alice in Wonderland”.  She supervised four public art projects in the Tucson area with high school youth and won commissions to design and paint five large scale outdoor murals across the country as well as at the Biosphere II and La Posada Hotel on Oracle Blvd.  She has taught at the University of Arizona and Pima Community College. Novelli’s fine art work has been exhibited at several Tucson Galleries and in May-August 2020 she will have a one woman show at the Tucson International Airport and September 2020 at Agua Caliente Gallery. Amy Novelli has been living in Tucson since 1996.  When not painting, Novelli trains and rides her three horses with friends and guests in the Tucson Mountains and several Arizona wilderness areas.
Amy Novelli’s scenic painting is supported in part by a generous gift from Jill Ballesteros.

Nanalee Raphael (Costume Manager) has known from age 5 that she would work in theatre. Of course, she thought it would be as an actor, not as someone who flings fabric around. She feels blessed that she has always been employed in costuming, for both professional and academic theatres, and has never had to have a “day job.” Until moving to Tucson in 1995, she was peripatetic in her work situations, desiring to work with theatres all over the country. She has taught at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee but was lured by the bright lights of Chicago and so moved there to teach at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Following her husband to central Illinois, she then wangled a position at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where she created a successful costume rental program. She then gave up all that greenery to come to Tucson to teach and design at the University of Arizona. She has worked as a costume designer, costume director and/or draper in professional theatres in Michigan, (Hope Summer Repertory, Holland), Wisconsin (American Players Theatre, Spring Green), Illinois (Goodman, Wisdom Bridge, and Steppenwolf, Chicago), New York (The Public, NYC), Arizona (ART & ATC, Tucson), at Shakespeare Festivals in Vermont and New Jersey, and California (The Old Globe, San Diego). She received both her Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Costume Design and Technology from Syracuse University. She is one of the “Pioneering Seven,” the first group of women to study full-time at Dartmouth College.

Nanalee Raphael, Costume Manager
Peter Bleasby, Master Electrician

Peter Bleasby (Master Electrician) lit his first show at 13. Professionally, he was with BBC-TV for several years, and was an assistant to UK lighting designer Richard Pilbrow during the inaugural production of the National Theatre (Hamlet, directed by Olivier.) He transferred to architectural lighting, but maintained his theatre interests by lighting many shows on both sides of the Atlantic. When The Rogue established itself at The Historic Y in 2009, he volunteered for the initial season, returning in 2013 with lighting designer Don Fox, and later working with Deanna Fitzgerald. He devised the installation of the permanent wiring system that enables lighting teams to devote more time to the creative process. For the Southern Arizona AIDS Foundation he directs the technical and logistical aspects of fundraisers, including the fashion show Moda Provocateur.

Susan Collinet (House Manager) earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in Creative Writing and English Literature from the University of Arizona in 2008. Decades before returning to college as a non-traditional student, Susan spent twenty years in amateur theater, mostly on the East coast, as well as in Brussels, Belgium in the American Theater of Brussels, and the Theatre de Chenois in Waterloo. She has worked in such positions as a volunteer bi-lingual guide in the Children’s Museum of Brussels, the Bursar of a Naturopathic Medical school in Tempe, Arizona, an entrepreneur with two “Susan’s of Scottsdale” hotel gift shops in Scottsdale, Arizona, and as the volunteer assistant Director of Development of the Arizona Aids Project in Phoenix. Susan continues to work on collections of poetry and non-fiction. Her writing has won awards from Sandscript Magazine, the John Hearst Poetry Contest, the Salem College for Women’s Center for Writing, and was published in a Norton Anthology of Student’s Writing. In addition to being House Manager, Susan serves on the Board of Directors and acts as Volunteer Coordinator for the Rogue.

Susan Collinet, House Manager

Our Thanks

Tim Fuller
Arizona Daily Star
Chuck Graham
Kathleen Kennedy
Taming of the Review
Shawn Burke
Our Advertisers
John Dow
Student tickets are sponsored in part by generous donations from
Todd Hansen
and
Jean & Jordan Nerenberg

 

Holly Griffith as Maureen

Holly Griffith as Maureen

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Performance Schedule for The Beauty Queen of Leenane

Location: The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y, 300 East University Boulevard
Click here for information on free off-street parking

Performance run time of The Beauty Queen of Leenane is approximately one hours and forty minutes, including one ten-minute intermission.
Run time does not include the music preshow beginning 15 minutes before curtain, or post-show discussion.

Thursday, February 27, 2020, 7:30 pm DISCOUNT PREVIEW
Friday, February 28, 2020, 7:30 pm DISCOUNT PREVIEW
Saturday, February 29, 2020, 2:00 pm matinee
Saturday, February 29, 2020, 7:30 pm OPENING NIGHT
Sunday, March 1, 2020, 2:00 pm matinee

Thursday, March 5, 2020, 7:30 pm
Friday, March 6, 2020, 7:30 pm
Saturday, March 7, 2020, 2:00 pm
Saturday, March 7, 2020, 7:30 pm
Sunday, March 8, 2020, 2:00 pm matinee

Thursday, March 12, 2020, 7:30 pm
Friday, March 13, 2020, 7:30 pm CANCELLED
Saturday, March 14, 2020, 2:00 pm CANCELLED
Saturday, March 14, 2020, 7:30 pm CANCELLED
Sunday, March 15, 2020, 2:00 pm matinee CANCELLED

March 13, 2020

Dear Rogues,

It is with a heavy heart that we are canceling the remaining four performances of The Beauty Queen of Leenane at The Rogue Theatre due to the current public health risk of large gatherings. We are also canceling the upcoming staged reading of The House of Bernarda Alba on Sunday afternoon March 22.

At this time, we hope to continue with our production of Twelfth Night which is scheduled to open April 23. We'll be posting updates here on our Website as more developments occur.

As a nonprofit arts organization, we rely on your support. Your support is crucial to our existence, and The Rogue and other arts organizations could see significant losses due to the impact of COVID-19. Please consider making your existing ticket purchases for The Beauty Queen or Bernarda Alba a donation to The Rogue. If you would like to transfer your tickets to another production or would like a refund, please contact our box office at 520-551-2053.

The health and safety of you, our valued patrons, and our employees and artists is of utmost importance. Take care of yourselves. And thank you for your support and patience as we navigate this unprecedented and ever-changing situation. Know that we will be back in touch soon.

With affection,
Cynthia Meier and Joseph McGrath, Co-Founders

 

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Holly Griffith as Maureen

Ryan Parker Knox as Pato Dooley and Holly Griffith as Maureen

 

Cynthia Meier as Mag and Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley

Cynthia Meier as Mag and Hunter Hnat as Ray Dooley

 

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Cynthia Meier as Mag

Holly Griffith as Maureen and Cynthia Meier as Mag

 

Cynthia Meier as Mag

Cynthia Meier as Mag

Photos by Tim Fuller

 

 

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